The Growth of Finance, Financial Innovation, and
Systemic Risk
Lecture 3
BGSE Summer School in Macroeconomics, July 2013
Nicola Gennaioli, Universita’ Bocconi, IGIER and CREI
Risk Taking, Leverage and Financial Innovations
We saw previously how macroeconomic developments were linked to the growth in risk taking by certain financial sector players
We now consider the corresponding growth in leverage.
Two key points: It was inextricably lined to the creation of new
financial instruments These new instruments were critical in the
recent crisis
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Shadow banking and the 2007-2008 crisis
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Shadow (/securitized) banking: Provision of short-term safe debt to
intermediaries Debt is collateralized through securitization:
Intermediaries: originate, acquire, and pool loans Tranching of loan pools to create safe pieces
In 2007-8, as loan pools lost value, the system unraveled: External financing stopped, intermediaries lost from
retained risks
The Shadow Banking Sector
Origination: finance companies, financed through commercial paper
Loan warehousing, pooling, and tranching into ABS and their intermediation: broker dealers, structured investment vehicles (SIVs), etc.
Funding of above activities: money market funds, securities lenders
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Shadow Banking and Leverage
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Shadow Banking and Innovation
Traditional banking: banks raise deposits, originate loans, and keep these loans in their balance sheets.
Originate and distribute banking: banks raise deposits, originate loans, but sell these loans to the markets. Loans are pooled by shadow banks, and used
to crated ABS to raise collateralized financing.
The originate and distribute model was taught to bring stability: it would allow banks to reduce the risk in their balance sheets. Not quite what happened.
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Build a “neglected risks” model of Shadow Banking and Securitization7
Demand for safety: Outside investors only want riskless debt.
Securitization: Intermediaries use funds to originate safe and risky loans. Risky loans are subject to institution-specific idiosyncratic risk (and to aggregate risk). Trading and pooling of risky loans eliminates idiosyncratic risk.
Neglected Risks: investors and intermediaries neglect low probability aggregate risks (GS 2010, GSV 2011).
Neglected Risks8
This assumption captures:
Uncertainty of model-economy: overweighting of historical trends
Difficulty in measuring risk in complex, interconnected financial institutions
These problems exacerbated by financial innovations. New securities are difficult to understand for the price and to price for intermediaries Wrong models (Coval Jurek and Stafford, 2010)
How robust is the financial system to these problems?
Main results I9
Investors’ wealth drives securitization/shadow banking: As investors’ wealth becomes large, intermediaries
make marginal, risky loans. To create safe collateral, they securitize and pool them.
Intermediaries’ assets (loan portfolios) and liabilities (riskless debt) grow together. Aggregate risk yields a carry trade.
Pooling of risks endogenously renders intermediaries interconnected. Under RE, stability and welfare go up.
Main results II
With neglected risks, securitization creates a “diversification myth”: each single intermediary now looks safer.
Yet, pooling of idiosyncratic risks also raises the exposure of all intermediaries to any neglected aggregate tail risks. Ex-ante pooling creates ex-post fragility and
illiquidity
Securitization: expand ex-ante financing but creates fragility ex-post by capitalizing on investors’ misperception of risks
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Some Related literature11
Link shadow banking to growing investor wealth (Caballero et al. 2008). Account for link between risk-taking and low interest rates (Maddaloni and Peydro 2011, Jimenez et al. 2011). Show that with, neglected risks, insurance creates catastrophe bonds (Coval, Jurek, and Stafford 2009b).
Explain comovement of assets and leverage (Adrian and Shin, 2010) and intermediaries’ risk retention (Acharya, Schnabl, and Suarez 2010).
Endogenize bank interconnectedness and systematic risk. Shin (2009a) and Allen and Gale (2000). We focus on neglect of aggregate tail risks.
Explain how banks lose a fortune holding other banks’ risks in a crisis. See Benmelech and Dlugosz on CDO’s.
Ex-post illiquidity. Geanakoplos (2009), SV (2010), Gorton and Metrick (2010), etc. We focus on ex-ante insurance, not on short term debt.
Model pooling and tranching, but not as a result of asymmetric information (De Marzo and Duffie 1999) or ring-fencing.
Organization of Presentation
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The model with rational expectations The model with local thinking and results Extensions (briefly)
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Two dates t = 0, 1
There is a measure 1 of infinitely risk averse investors
Eω[C0 + minωC1,ω]
they receive wealth w at t = 0
There is a measure 1 of risk neutral intermediaries
Eω[C0 + C1,ω ]
they receive wealth wint < 1 at t = 0
Intermediaries invest by using their own wealth wint and by issuing riskless debt to investors: Issue debt D at t = 0, promise to repay rD at t =
1.
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Intermediaries have access to projects that pay in t=1:
Safe (H): invest IH,j and obtain RIH,j at t = 1
Limited aggregate supply of 1.
Risky (L). Invest IL,j and obtain:
There are three aggregate states ω = g, d, r, with
πg > πd > πr and Pr(πω) = φω
- there is both idiosyncratic and aggregate risk
- a pool of projects yields AIL πω in aggregate state ω
otherwise
ororyprobabilitwithAI rdgjL
0
),(,
Intermediaries’ return to investment
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Technology features decreasing returns + increasing risk
Marginal Return
R
1
E(πω)A
Total Investment
A
0
Timing
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At t = 0 each intermediary borrows Dj , invests IH,j and IL,j, sells SL,j units of risky investment, buys TL,j units of diversified pools of other intermediaries’ investments. Interest rate r, price of loans pL: competitively
set at t=0.
At t = 1 state ω and intermediaries’ returns are revealed. Investment pays off and debt is repaid.
Investors lend all of their wealth w if r > 1, they are indifferent between lending or not at r = 1.
Intermediaries’ expected profits I17
At t = 0 each intermediary j has expected profits:
R∙IH,j +
+ [Eω(πω)∙A∙(IL,j–SL,j) + Eω(πω)∙A∙TL,j + pL(SL,j–TL,j)] +
+ Dj – IH,j – IL,j + wint – rDj.
Return from idiosyncratic risk kept (IL,j–SL,j) is 0 or A.
Return from securitized pool TL,j is πω∙A in ω. The pool is only subject to aggregate risk
about πω.
Intermediaries’ expected profits II18
Intermediary j holds two types of risky investments. Risky investments originated and kept:
(IL,j–SL,j) →
Risky securitized pools purchased in the
market:
TL,j →
A∙(IL,j–SL,j) πg φg+ πd φd+ πr φr
0 otherwise
A∙πg ∙TL,j φg
A∙πd ∙TL,j φd
A∙πr∙TL,j φr
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The constraints faced by the intermediary are:
Feasibility: at t = 0 cannot invest more than resources raised
Riskless debt constraint:
rDj ≤ R∙IH,j + πr∙A∙TL,j.
Pledge safe return and securitized pool in worst state πr.
Intermediaries’ “carry trade” is [ Eω(πω)A – r ]∙TL,j
Feasibility of Securitization:
SL,j ≤ IL,j
Cannot sell more investments than those undertaken
Preliminaries
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Risky asset is securitized only if debt constraint is binding Pooling of risks relaxes investors’ demand for
safe collateral
Securitization pools are bought by intermediaries: they are the high value buyers. Thus, TL,j = SL,j. Use pools to back debt. Securitization supports growth in leverage and… Allows intermediaries to earn a return above
safe debt
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low w : no risky investment, no debt, no securitizationInterest rate
Total wealth
Risky investment
and securitization
R
wint
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higher w: no risky investment, some debt, no securitizationInterest rate
Total wealth
Risky investment
and securitization
R
wint1
R > R(1- wint)
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Intermediate w: some risky investment, debt, no securitizationInterest rate
Total wealth
Risky investment
and securitization
R
wint1
R > E(πω)Aw
E(πω)A
IL = w + wint – 1
R / E(πω)A
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high w : risky investment, debt, securitizationInterest rate
Risky investment
and securitization
R
wint1
R + πrASL > E(πω)Aw
E(πω)A
IL = w + wint – 1
SL = [E(πω)/πr]w – R/Aπr
R/E(πω)A wint + w*
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Very high w : risky investment, debt, maximal securitizationInterest rate
Risky investment
and securitization
R
wint1
R + πrAIL > r(w)wE(πω)A
R/E(πω)A wint + w* wint + w**
1
Securitization under RE I26
Securitization endogenously arises to meet the demand “w” for riskless debt. Driven by marginal, risky, projects. By lowering idiosyncratic risk, pooling boosts
safe collateral and debt capacity. Growth of assets and leverage
Pools allow intermediaries to earn a yield (“carry trade”)
When at t = 1 returns are revealed, not much happens Some intermediaries do better than others (if
securitization is partial), but all debt is truly safe.
Securitization is welfare improving.
Securitization under RE II27
In worst case scenario πr :
A fraction 1 – πr of intermediaries get 0 on their
projects:
[R + πr∙A∙SL + 0∙(IL–SL)] – [R + πr∙A∙SL] = 0
A fraction πr of intermediaries get A on their
projects:
[R + πr∙A∙SL + A∙(IL–SL)] – [R + πr∙A∙SL] = A∙(IL–SL) > 0
Securitization and Local Thinking
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Local thinking (GS 2010, GSV 2011): neglect unlikely (tail) risk. Here is “recession”, because φr = min φω.
At t = 0, agents think only of “growth” and “downturn”
Two things change with respect to RE at t = 0 Assess higher average return ELT(πω)A > E(πω)A
Relax debt constraint:
rDj ≤ R + πd∙A∙TL,j.
Equilibrium under Local Thinking at t = 029
Securitization and leverage expand. At low w this raises interest rates, at higher w this also boosts investment
Interest rate
R
E(πω)A
wint+w* wint + w**
1
ELT(πω)A
wint + w**,LT
higher r higher r, D
Securitization and Local Thinking at t=1
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If at t = 1 the state is g or d, debt is sustainable, as with RE
In worst case scenario πr :
Share 1 – πr of unsuccessful intermediaries fail:
[R + πr∙A∙SL + 0∙(IL–SL)] – [R + πd∙A∙SL] = – (πd – πr)∙A∙SL < 0
Share πr of successful intermediaries also fail
iff:
[R + πr∙A∙SL + A∙(IL–SL)] – [R + πd∙A∙SL] =
= A∙(IL–SL) – (πd – πr)∙A∙SL < 0
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Default and repayment in recession
All intermediaries fail if:
< 1 + (πd – πr)
A “successful” intermediary is more likely to fail if more investment is securitized! Pooling creates correlation in
intermediaries’ assets Small mistakes create massive fragility
when w is large
L
L
S
I
Securitization and Market Liquidity at t = 132
At t = 1, state ω is learned only partially. Observe s in {l, h} Here h is informative of {g, d}, while l is
informative of {d, r} In s, a share qs of risky projects pays off A at t =
1. qh > ql
Two implications from imperfect learning and “early” projects: We can study retrading and market liquidity at t
= 1 Early intermediaries may have liquidity to buy
claims at t = 1.
Due to “early” projects, some debt repayment occurs at t = 1 Still focus on long term debt, but promising two
coupons For simplicity, return R is ring fenced by most
senior debt class
Event tree nesting the previous setup
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Event tree under local thinking
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As ql is revealed, the agent realizes to be in the lower branch, which did not come to mind at t = 0.
Basic results with partial information
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Not much changes at t = 0. If at t = 1 neglected state ql realizes, investors learn that debt may default at t = 2 if state is πr.
In ql investors value each securitized asset πrA, intermediaries value the same asset at E(πω|ql)A > πrA. Can a trade arise?
The total liquidity of “early” intermediaries is equal to:
ql∙[A∙(IL,j–SL,j) – (πd – πr)A∙SL,j]
Which increases in the unsecured portion of projects and decreases in the unexpected drop in collateral (πd – πr)A
Market Fragility at t = 1
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In neglected state ql the price of securitized projects drops to investors’ reservation value πrA when:
IL,j/SL,j < 1 + (πd – πr) + πd/ql
High securitization reduces the liquidity of successful intermediaries
Securitization creates fragility also by draining out market liquidity after neglected risks realize. Limited securitization leaves “spare liquidity” ex-post. Correlation in balance sheet costly when neglect
risk occursThis goes beyond idea that intermediaries
commit all of their wealth at t = 0 (see SV 2010 and GSV 2011)
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Ex-ante and ex-post liquidity
Due to market liquidity, investors might be willing to lend against risky collateral (and debt) based on resale value. Or, equivalently, to directly buy securitized
assets. Markets do the “pooling,” regardless of who holds the risky assets
If early intermediaries buy back risky assets at t = 1 at p1 > πdA, investors may lend more than reservation value at t = 0
Market trading at price p1
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Failure of market insurance at t = 1
Liquidity in good times is consistent with illiquidity in bad times if
“Normal times” market liquidity at t = 1 can coexist with illiquidity when neglected risks materialize.
Investors lend more than reservation value πdA because they expect the t = 1 market to be liquid. If securitization is large, as ql realizes the market becomes illiquid and price drops to πrA
Securitization creates both liquidity in normal times and illiquidity when neglected risks materialize. This boosts fragility and creates spikes in risk premia
drop price unexpecteddropliquidity unexpected
)(E
r
h
l
hq
q
q
Some Facts (I)39
Mortgage Origination and Subprime Securitization
Some Facts (II)
Securitization and decline in lending standards
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Some Facts (III)
Centrality of the collapse of AAA securities
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Some Facts (IV)
Collapse of commercial paper market
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Some Facts (V)
Securitization, subprimes and the collapse of ABS
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Some Facts (VI)
Unusual securities
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Some Facts (VII)
Collapse in the issuance of ABS
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Conclusions I
We offered the following theory for the positive correlation between assets and leverage, and the resulting financial fragility: Large wealth of risk averse investors creates
enormous pressure/opportunities for banks to manufacture safe assets
This induces banks to securitize and expand their balance sheets by holding “safer” pooled risks
Banks make enormous profits out of the resulting carry trade
The system becomes highly interconnected. As some regional housing markets cool off and delinquencies rise, the system collapses
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Conclusions I
Neglected risks are subtle and changing Cannot expect regulators to stay ahead Capital requirements are a crude but
appropriate instrument for reducing bets Problems with market-based risk weighting
Extreme concentration of exposures to a given asset class should raise a red flag
Deeper skepticism about innovations that capitalize on neglect of risk, such as prime MMF.
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